Example sentences of "[verb] in [art] [noun] 's [noun] " in BNC.

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1 How should the bond be disclosed in the company 's accounts ?
2 Recruitment and internal promotions can assist in the company 's manpower plans .
3 Then , suddenly and unexpectedly , in the spring of 1933 my uncle collapsed lapsed and died while walking in a friend 's garden .
4 Thus the manes would be stopped from interfering in the family 's affairs .
5 The alleged offence is said to have been committed in the Stack 's Leisure Park , Lochee , on 12 March .
6 For example , in flowering plants the haploid stage is reduced to the pollen tube , derived from a haploid pollen grain that falls on the stigma of a flower and grows until it reaches and fertilizes the egg cell that lies in the flower 's ovary .
7 The strength of this role lies in the holder 's ability to analyse issues and suggestions objectively .
8 The major advantage of automated over manual cartography lies in the computer 's ability to store cartographic and associated data and its speed in handling data and calculating results .
9 The interactivity lies in the computer 's capacity to respond to what the user does .
10 One aspect of company power of the different kind that is in issue here lies in the company 's ability to shape the terms of that relationship .
11 The importance of the research lies in the controversey 's impact on the communal life of British Muslims .
12 Thus the ‘ feel good ’ factor lies in the crowd 's delight in the decline and fall of public figures : build 'em up , knock 'em down .
13 The best example of this and of the way in which Switchboard tends to mirror the mainstream gay ( and still mainly male ) community lies in the organization 's response to AIDS .
14 Noblenet is currently negotiating with Sun Microsystems Inc and Hewlett-Packard Co and believes their interest in EZ-RPC lies in the product 's ability to rejuvenate the ageing network topologies the two still have , respectively the Open Networking Computing and Network Computing System environments .
15 And so the explanation lies in the men 's relation both to the culture of domesticity , power in the domestic sphere , and the sexual division of labour .
16 If there is any reason for hope , it lies in the world 's lack of interest .
17 But anyone who launches a bid for Ferranti will want to be sure there are no more black holes lurking in the company 's books .
18 A possible intervention of the King 's Proctor to upset the divorce had for some time been lurking in the Government 's mind .
19 As he left the court , he asked the King to visit him when he , too , wed in a year 's time .
20 The wealth of information collected and most ably synthesised in the project 's report was used as evidence on which to base suggestions for possible key topics round which teaching could be based .
21 Plastic explosive burns quietly , as I once demonstrated in an admiral 's ashtray , believing the stuff to be an enemy incendiary compound .
22 Note has been taken of these and some of them appear in the panel 's revision .
23 Woolmer , Burgess and Norris also appear in the Overseer 's account for 1780 .
24 The clinical terms project was started last year to develop a set of terms comprehensive enough to cover anything that a clinician might need to write in a patient 's record .
25 He drew in the horse 's reins and waited silently , his eyes momentarily tightly closed .
26 The setting is physically located in the addressee 's territory in Edinburgh University and a prominent physical feature is a tape-recorder which is switched on .
27 Bradford Exchange Station , located in the city 's Transport Interchange , has extensive rail links .
28 The powers set out in the rest of Clause 3 are standard matters often appearing in a company 's memorandum and , as is common practice , they are broadly worded for the sake of completeness .
29 The powers set out in the rest of Clause 3 are standard matters often appearing in a company 's memorandum and , as is common practice , they are broadly worded for the sake of completeness .
30 The binding of items emerged as the second most important reason for their non-availability , accounting for around one in five ( 21% ) of unsatisfied requests , while the Library 's inability to locate items when they were requested ( 10% ) , and a tendency for some readers to submit requests for items not appearing in the Library 's catalogues ( 10% ) were additional reasons which occurred with some frequency .
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